Emerging
epidemiological evidence has associated exposure to polycyclic
aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) with chronic diseases including cardiometabolic
diseases and neurodegeneration. However, little information is available
about their subacute effects, which may accumulate over years and
contribute to chronic disease development. To fill this knowledge
gap, we designed a natural experiment among 26 healthy young adults
who were exposed to elevated PAHs for 10 weeks after traveling from
Los Angeles to Beijing in 2014 and 2015. Serum was collected before,
during, and after the trip for metabolomics analysis. We identified
50 metabolites that significantly changed 6–8 weeks after the
travel to Beijing (FDR < 5%). The network analysis revealed two
main independent modules. Module 1 was allocated to oxidative homeostasis-related
response and module 2 to delayed enzymatic deinduction response. Remarkably,
the module 1 metabolites were recovered 4–7 weeks after participants’
return, while the module 2 metabolites were not. Urinary hydroxylated
PAHs were significantly associated with metabolites from both modules,
while PAH carboxylic acids, likely metabolites of alkylated PAHs,
were only associated with antioxidation-related metabolites. These
results suggested differential subacute effects of unsubstituted and
alkylated PAHs. Further studies are warranted to elucidate the role
of the reversibility of metabolite changes in adverse health effects
of PAHs.